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French knew about Youth Home. Tyler had already seen a therapist at Youth Home. (Tyler and his father did not want to talk about how that came about.) Tiffany, failing school and misbehaving, needed help as well. Royal Mail customers urged to watch out for delivery scam (Image: AFP via Getty Images)Our free email newsletter sends you the biggest headlines from news, sport and showbizOur free email newsletter sends you the biggest headlines from news, sport and showbizSign upWhen you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Sometimes they’ll include recommendations for other related newsletters or services we offer. OurPrivacy Noticeexplains more about how we use your data, and your rights.

You can unsubscribe at any time.Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy noticeIt was 2am when a knock came at Omar door.Frightened, he was told he had just minutes to gather his things before being put on a bus to an unknown destination in the middle of the night.The 29 year old, who suffers PTSD after being persecuted by a militia group in his homeland, feared he was being deported which he said would mean certain death.He had been placed in a hotel for asylum seekers while his application to remain in the UK was processed but was shocked when he was suddenly moved to a disused army barracks, behind metal fences and barbed wire, in the Welsh countryside.For more than eight terrifying weeks, Omar said he had to sleep in a hut with five others, and claimed around 150 people were packed together in small communal areas to eat and watch TV, despite some showing coronavirus symptoms.He has lifted the lid on his experience at Penally Barracks in Penbrokeshire as pressure mounts on Home Secretary Priti Patel to stop packing asylum seekers into army bases.Refugees and sick as Home Office contractors hand out mealsCampaigners have branded it inhumane and demanded Penally and Napier barracks in Folkestone are closed, but the Home Office claims its actions are “firm but fair”.Omar not his real name told The Mirror he experienced flashbacks of the brutal treatment he endured after being kidnapped by a militia group in the Middle East.He said it was like being in a “detention centre”, and said he was “terrified”.The former accountant, who is not allowed to work while his application to remain in the UK is processed, said: “I didn have any warning, they just took us to an assembly point in Wembley and then we got on a bus.Fire erupts at army barracks housing 400 asylum seekers hit by Covid outbreak”We were certain we were going to be deported, I was terrified. Finally we reached the camp, we could see the metal fences and the huts, it was a shocking moment for us.”Within hours of his arrival, Omar said, far right protesters descended on the barracks determined to intimidate those inside.”I heard the sound of someone hitting metal,” he said.”I was terrified. They were hitting the metal gates, I didn know how to react, I was just told it would be better to go back to my room.””I was crying all night, I was thinking should I do, how should I get help? “I have PTSD, when I was in Penally I had nightmares and flashbacks of what happened to me, I needed to get psychological treatment.”Not long after he arrived, one of Omar roommates lost his sense of smell and started coughing, but was not immediately isolated..